THE NEW YORKER . vival meetings, with the audience fre- quently responding antiphonally to rhetorical questIons, and even more frequently breaking into song. In early August, the Evening Post offered a hundred-dollar prize for the best new Republican song in English and another hundred dollars for the best one in German, and, to simplif) matters, sug- gested that the words be adapted to the tune of "Suoni la tromba," from "1 Puritani," whereupon the Daily News derided the Republicans as "the opera party" and observed that Frémont's "air, figure, and adventures would bet- ter make him the hero of Fra Diavolo." Moreover, the Repuhlicans allowed women, who, of course, couldn't vote, to attend their meetings in large num- bers, and sometimes went so far as to let active feminists speak, which prompted the Morning Express to write, "The practice of bringing women upon the rostrum, in noisy political gatherings, to 'speak for freedom' . . . may be looked upon as a modified manifestation of the doctrines and principles of the 'Free Love' clubs." Republican rallies were often distinguished by the pres- ence of an intellectual element con- sisting of clergymen, teachers, scientIsts, and writers, and including Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, who had never been much interested in polItics before; James Russell Lowell, who said that Fré111ont's election would be the best event of his lifetime; John Greenleaf Whittier, who churned out some dul] verse in Frémont's honor; and Ralph Waldo Emerson, Wash- ington Irving, Carl Schurz, and White- law Reid. In the Midwest, Abraham Lincoln, a "Thig lawyer who had re- cently swung over to the Republican ranks, made ninety speeches for F rémont. In the face of all this, the Democrats and the regular Know-Nothings dog- gedly continued to attack Fremont on personal grounds. Their next major revelation, published in a pamphlet called "Black Republican Imposture Exposed! Fraud Upon the People!," concerned "the California claims." These were vouchers that Fremont had filed with the government for materiel and services hè commandeered in 1846 and 1847, first as leader of his Cali- rv/AN. 123 Long Life for Your Beauty! ... the exclusive Frances Denney bio-genic formula that activates the living processes of the sk.in! Viva is a revollitionary development In skin care..... tl1e dynanlic bioMgenic fornlula that retards the signs of agillg skin hy activating tlH skin's living processes. Its n1agnifi- cent hlpnd of !)re< iousplenlent s activate the skin cells like a well M ])alal1ced diet nourishes the rest of thehody! Viva goes to the heart of thp problenl.. .. .. it is absorbed to the il1nernlO t. layer of skin cells. the area wllere healltiflll skin hegins.. .... gently coaxing it into firnlf1r contours, enCOllr- agil1g it to youtl1ful elasticity.. Tiny line dnd wrinkles sepn1 to val1isn, that drYMskin look disappears. Viva i for you! ...... No l11atter what your age... .110 matter \vllat your skin type! It is the nlagnificent beauty creanl that can-and \vill-he]p you start today to look yotu1ger.. 5..00, 8.50, 15.00 plus tax '.;':'. ..::..^ ..-:..' ',::' , ., '., <''-:.,.., Tr/herever fine cosmetics are sold, or wTlte FRANCES DENNEY, Philadelphia " ffi.... .. " /'> n>Ø! ..... 'x.:. ''':-'. <> 4 , ,-' ;:., (. -. :":J$t': ;: ..... ' \ FRANCES DEN/N ? , Y , . - . . .o( .-:-. " " ,, '<0> 'f